Numéro
J. Phys. IV France
Volume 107, May 2003
Page(s) 91 - 94
DOI https://doi.org/10.1051/jp4:20030251


J. Phys. IV France
107 (2003) 91
DOI: 10.1051/jp4:20030251

The route of transfer to the human population of lead from contaminated soil close to a smelter in Bulgaria

J.R. Bacon1, N. Dinev2, L. Stanislavova3, D. Penkov4 and C. Willeke-Wetstein5

1  The Macaulay Institute, Aberdeen, UK
2  N. Poushkarov Institute of Soil Science, Sofia, Bulgaria
3  National Agricultural Advisory Service, Sofia, Bulgaria
4  Higher Agriculture Academy, Plovdiv, Bulgaria
5  Department of Livestock Ecology, Justus-Liebig University Giessen, Giessen, Germany


Abstract
Past emissions from a non-ferrous smelter at Kuklen, near Plovdiv, in Bulgaria have resulted in very high concentrations of heavy metals, in particular Cd and Pb, in agricultural soils close to the plant. An interdisciplinary research project, initiated under the auspices of the EU INCO-Copernius programme, has included investigation of the principal processes by which the heavy metals are being transferred from the contaminated soils to the children of the village who have abnormally high Cd and Pb blood concentrations. The primary source of Pb in blood is the land close to the smelter which bas elevated concentrations of Pb and which is used to grow food and fodder for livestock. Fodder with Pb concentrations as high as 48 mg/kg is consumed directly by the animals resulting in high Pb concentrations in livers and kidneys. These are then consumed by the human population. The evidence clearly indicates this to be one route of transfer through the food chain. Other, more direct, routes, e.g the use of flour prepared from locally produced grain or the direct ingestion of dust from school playgrounds, the street and homes, may also play an important role.



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